Source – yesmagazine.org
– The United States has seen the rise of chronic diseases and certain cancers, but it may soon see the rise of healthier diets.
“When we see healthier eating, we see more disease prevention and less hospital stays.”
“When we see healthier eating, we see more disease prevention and less hospital stays, which means less money spent on healthcare,” says Leah Sarris, chef and program director of The Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine at Tulane University, where medical students are learning to cook to better advise the health of their patients. By getting them to approach food preparation with ease and awareness, this next generation of doctors is striving to provide building blocks for long-term health management.
Started in 2012, the program couldn’t have come at a more crucial time. In 2010, chronic disease accounted for 86 percent of all healthcare spending; four years later, the cost of treating heart disease alone totaled $315.4 billion, including medication and hospital care.
Although people have used food as medicine for centuries, the educational programming for it has not been around as long. In the U.S., The Goldring Center’s culinary curriculum is the first of its kind.
Students complete eight classes that are three hours each, earning a total of 24 hours of in-class culinary practice. Fourth-year students can choose from seminars that focus on different clinical interests, including celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, food allergies, diabetes, pregnancy, and neurocognition.
Students also teach free cooking classes to the public. Because medical students are being trained to prescribe healthy eating to their patients, Sarris says, the community classes are essential to their learning. Medical students volunteer and teach participants cooking techniques for healthier eating.
Serving around 600 community members a year, the weekly classes fill up fast; the waiting list hovers around 300. They range from beginner to advanced, and each series is organized into eight to 12 classes over two to three months.
“The hands-on component gets people to talk about food instead of nutrients. Food is something that unites us and we can all understand,” Sarris says.
Lori Neupert, a local, took the beginner and intermediate series last year, and liked how the beginner class centered around “breaking down the barrier for people who are intimidated about going into the kitchen and preparing a nutritious meal. [You learn] how to feed and enjoy yourself.”
She felt especially motivated after learning how to chop an onion, grate ginger, and sauté fish. “When you prepare your own food, you’re in control of your salt and sugar intake. Processed food is loaded with that stuff,” Neupert observes.
The community classes also provide a space for low-income people to learn how to cook, budget their money, manage their time, and enjoy healthy meals.
“Our goal is that our recipes are all under $2.50 a portion. We are able to keep a low budget by [using] less meat and processed foods, more legumes, grains, and seasonal fruits and vegetables,” says Sarris.
More and more, diet is becoming a mode of preventative care.
She and the medical students educate about “foods that hold well,” like onions, sweet potatoes, and frozen fruits and veggies. These are foods that people can use in a variety of ways and over a long period of time, saving money and trips to the supermarket.
Dennis Ren, a fourth-year medical student at Tulane, explains that learning how to cook empowers the community and his patients with simple, practical tools. “Lots of people don’t eat well because they don’t know how to cook.”
Ren feels confident about using practical advice to develop a course of care for his patients.
“If I had a patient with congestive heart failure, I would prescribe them the medication they need. I would also try to lessen their salt intake. But I understand that salt tastes really good. I would keep the savory flavor by encouraging them to use lemon instead, [which] activates the same receptor on the tongue,” he says.
This integrative understanding of healthcare may change the way it is structured.
“In five years, your doctor might prescribe you a cooking class, and healthcare companies will pay for that,” says Sarris.
About 20 medical schools have adopted Tulane’s program, including UCLA Clinical and Translational Science Institute, University of Illinois-Chicago, and Kendall College School of Culinary Arts.
Last year, Renee Zonka, teaching chef and associate dean at Kendall, spearheaded its pilot culinary medicine program. She predicts an impact on family and culture. “[Doctors and their patients] may try something different—they may choose to eat and cook a little healthier, promoting better health for them and their families in ways that still fit with their lifestyles and cultures,” she says.
More and more, diet is becoming a mode of preventative care. By cooking healthy meals, patients are better able to fight disease—while enjoying themselves in the kitchen.
http://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power/is-cooking-the-future-of-medicine-20160208
Related…
3-Course Interview: Tim Harlan
The Tulane University chef-turned-doctor talks about food as medicine
Chef-turned-doctor Tim Harlan is the assistant dean for clinical services at Tulane University School of Medicine and executive director of the Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine, a culinary teaching facility for medical students and the community, where participants learn to view food “as medicine.” Harlan speaks at the sixth annual James Beard Foundation Food Conference Oct. 19. He talked with Gambit about what the future of food as medicine looks like.
The topic at this year’s conference is rethinking the future of food. What’s the future of food as medicine?
Harlan: We started out with this idea that we would teach medical students how to cook and we would use that as a metaphor for helping them understand how to work with their patients differently. That’s evolved into … taking that information … and translating that into the conversation that they will have in the examination room with their patients about food. … [H]ow do you help [physicians] with substantive messaging for their patients that can have an impact on their health? We can give them the tools to be able to make those changes with their patients — and the dialogue. … Our data says people have improved their diets. … [T]he challenge now is to see what we’ve learned here in New Orleans and learn how to scale it to other providers.

What are the challenges in getting people to eat healthier?
H: I think the challenge for folks across the spectrum — no matter the socioeconomic class, profession, whether they are a truck driver or a secretary or a chef — (is that) most of us unfortunately don’t have those skills to manage our own day-to-day nutrition. There’s a lot of historic reasons for that: There’s no more home economics classes taught in the schools; there’s a shift to the two-parent families who are both working — we’re all busy and there’s easy access to simple, pre-prepared calorie-dense foods that have clearly contributed to the problem of obesity as well as diet-related illness.
In our community programming … we want you to learn how to read a recipe … build a weekly menu, plan for the week, go to the grocery store, cook, plan for leftovers and then also start working toward thinking differently about all of that. … We take the best research, which is the Mediterranean diet, and we translate that for the American kitchen. We certainly do not focus on weight loss. We focus on eating great food that just happens to be great for you.
Chefs are a big part of the equation but don’t always welcome change when it comes to their cooking techniques. What does the future of food look like for restaurants?
H: It’s not just chefs; it’s the food industry as a whole. The problem is that there is this perception among chefs that (food) has to be really salty and really fatty and really greasy and really rich. But the foods that are healthy taste better, period. There’s tons of research about this. I can put a beef stroganoff in front of you, and then I can put a reduced-fat or a lower calorie, healthier version in front of you: if you’re blind-folded, you’re going to choose the healthier one about 85 percent of the time. Unless I tell you first, and if I tell you first, those numbers are almost exactly reversed. Part of this lies in our perception of how we think about food. Getting from point A to point B, that’s a huge undertaking. We want to have a role in that and I think that’s the pie in the sky for us at the Goldring Center. We are developing programming for chefs right now … and we absolutely see this as a key.
































